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Infection Control Practices in Anesthesia

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Title: Infection Control Practices in Anesthesia


1
Infection Control Practices in Anesthesia
  • Brian D. Thorson, CRNA,MA
  • September 28, 2009

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1. Leave you with more questions than answers2.
Prevent one patient or another provider from
needlessly being exposed to something that could
adversely effect their life
  • Goals of the presentation

4
Fairy God Mother of Anesthesia
5
I am now Anesthesia
  • I do not wipe of injection ports
  • I do not wipe of tops of vials of medication
    prior to inserting a needle
  • I do not wear sterile gloves while suctioning a
    patients endotracheal tube
  • I can drop suction catheters on the floor and not
    change them before re-inserting them in the
    patients mouth
  • If unable to find a place for the yankauer
    suction catheter, just simply slip it between the
    mattress and the bedframe
  • I can insert IV catheters/arterial lines without
    wearing gloves

6
Will you do my sons anesthetic, 1994?
  • How could you even question me?
  • I am anesthesia, I could not have possibly caused
    a problem!

7
Could I have possibly done something that may
have lead to the elevation in his temperature?
8
Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence
  • Because we do not see it and are temporally
    remote from the complications clinical
    manifestations, we may not recognize our role in
    causing it.
  • Dr. Chuck Biddle AANA Journal June 2009

9
Norman Oklahoma- James Hill, CRNAMore than 50
people at an Oklahoma hospital have potentially
been infected with Hepatitis C after a CRNA
repeatedly used the same needle and syringe when
administering anesthesia to his patients- 6 end
up with Hepatitis C (September 2002)
10
AANAs Response
  • Notify all 35,000 members, in an all member
    mailing that reuse of syringes was an
    unacceptable practice.
  • Instructed CRNAs to discontinue this practice
  • Reuse of needles between different patients as
    well as on the same patient is an unacceptable
    practice.
  • Start of a national campaign to ensure that
    members were not engaging in this practice

11
2002-2006
  • Hope that alerts of unsafe practices to members
    will result in change of practice
  • Examples of unsafe practices continue to surface
    within the anesthesia community
  • First-hand and the Media
  • Classroom
  • Travel - laryngoscope blades/ETT
  • Evidence continued to exist in my own clinical
    practice

12
Nurse Accused of Spreading Hepatitis C at
Military Hospital
  • August 6- October 12 2004
  • Jon Dale Jones, CRNA may have potentially
    infected up to 15 patients with a potentially
    fatal strain of hepatitis C by stealing drugs
    meant for his patients and knowingly passing
    on his own infection to his patients.
  • LA Times March 2008 nine count indictment of
    assault and obtaining a controlled substance by
    fraud
  • Indictment comes after a more than 2 year
    investigation by the FBI

13
Thousands May Be Infected With Hepatitis C from
Las Vegas Clinic
  • February 28, 2008
  • Problems occurred between March of 2004 and
    January 2008
  • A Clark county investigation found that the
    clinic was not using clean syringes for each
    patient anesthetized there.
  • Multi dose vials/syringe reuse
  • As many as 40,000 patients may have been exposed

14
Dr. Harvey Finkelstein
  • 2007 -An anesthesiologist in Nassau County New
    York, told health officials that he would reuse a
    syringe to draw medications for patients from
    more than on vial. More than 600 patients
    exposed to hepatitis C

15
Cleaning Equipment Improperly
  • VA story about Veterans exposed to HIV secondary
    to scopes being improperly cleaned.
  • TEE scope locally being soaked in Cidex and not
    rinsed prior to be inserted into a patients
    esophagus and left for a many hour procedure
    leading to tissue damage to the esophagus

16
Safe Injection Practices Campaign 2009
  • 9 organizations including Accreditation
    Association of Ambulatory Healthcare (AAAHC),
    American Association of Nurse Anesthetists
    (AANA), Ambulatory Surgery Foundation,
    Association for Professionals in Infection
    Control and Epidemiology(APIC) Becton, Dinkinson
    and Company, CDC, CDC Foundation, HONOR Reform
    Foundation, Nebraska Medical Association and
    Nevada State Medical Association.

17
Safe Injection Practices Campaign
  • Press conference held in Washington DC Feb 11th
    2009
  • Majority Leader Harry Reid, D (NV)
  • Shelley Berkley D (NV)
  • One and Only One Campaign
  • CDC

18
With all of this going on, why do we still have
the problem?
  • Awareness
  • Not me, someone else
  • Laziness
  • Production Pressure
  • Resources/supportive measures in hospitals

19
Awareness
  • Despite all of the publicity about unsafe
    practices in anesthesia, providers lack the
    awareness that their practices maybe unsafe.
  • Anesthesia providers may hold the belief that
    because there is a lack of evidence that our
    routine practices have direct, negative,
    iatrogenic implications for patients, we are not
    participatory in the genesis of infective risk
    and complications ( AANA Journal, June 2009
    Biddle)

20
Dr. Chuck Biddle, Absence of Evidence Is Not
Evidence of Absence
  • The nature of anesthesias exposure to a given
    patient is defined by
  • Relatively brief period of intense and invasive
    procedures
  • Little meaningful follow-up once the patient
    leaves the OR
  • Post-operative visits within 24hours

21
Awareness
  • In the United States, Hepatitis B, (HBV) and
    Hepatitis C (HCV) from health care exposures has
    been considered to be uncommon.
  • However, recent outbreaks of HBV and HCV
    infections, primarily in settings outside of
    acute care hospitals, indicate a growing problem.
  • Annuals of Internal Medicine 2009 review of
    records at the CDC revealed 33 outbreaks of HBV
    and HCV in nonhospital settings in the US from
    1998-2008. In hospital outbreaks numbered 7

22
Awareness
  • In the non hospital settings, infection control
    resources and oversight have traditionally been
    lacking
  • Breaches of fundamental principles of infection
    control by health care personal were responsible
    for patient to patient transmission in all of the
    outbreaks
  • CDC records indicate that more than 400 persons
    were infected
  • All of these transmissions events could have been
    prevented through adherence to basic infection
    control practices

23
Awareness
  • Within the hospital setting- On a daily basis,
    the OR Schedule includes many patients coming
    directly to surgery from the ICUs
  • The ICU is considered the epicenter of bacterial,
    viral and fungal organisms for many reasons
  • Populations of patients with complex conditions
    with a wide range of pathophysiology
  • Proximity to other patients
  • High density of hands-on interventions by staff
  • Widespread use of mechanical ventilation and
    antimicrobial resistance

24
Awareness
  • In 2006, national viral hepatitis surveillance
    data revealed that 50 of patients with acute HBV
    and HCV infection were reported without
    accompanying risk factor data
  • Among those whom a risk factor data were
    reported, 56 with acute HBV and 32 with HCV
    when asked could not specify a known risk factor
    for their infection
  • Take home message- Just because you review a
    patients risk factors, you can not assume they do
    not have HBV or HCV!

25
Awareness
  • Many of the outbreaks of HBV and HCV are directly
    attributable to unsafe injections, caused by
    failure to practice aseptic techniques when
    preparing and administering parenteral
    medications
  • These outbreaks suggest a greater emphasis on
    aseptic technique in injection safety is needed

26
Awareness
  • Providers must become aware that the long term
    solutions to our infection control problems do
    not come from the pharmaceutical industry, but
    rather low cost interventions (Biddle)
  • Efforts designed to enhance our knowledge of the
    process and mechanisms of nosocomial infection
    must be aggressively pursued so that effective
    interventions can be recommended, implement and
    complied with.

27
Awareness of the Dangers
  • Anesthesia workstation
  • Maslyk et al,(AANA J. 2002) assessed the density
    and diversity of microbial organisms on a variety
    of randomly selected anesthesia machines
    following routine use
  • Wide variety of pathogenic organisms were
    cultured including (Streptococcus, acinetobacter,
    staphylococcus aureus and gram-negative rods)
  • Anesthesia providers daily perform a large number
    of interventions in which there is routine,
    direct contact with patients, often with their
    blood and bodily fluids

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Awareness of the Dangers
  • A study performed more than 10 years ago that
    sampled laryngoscopes, found that 20 of the
    blades and 40 of the handles tested positive for
    occult blood.
  • What are the implications of aerosolized
    particles from the surgical fields?

30
Not Me, Someone Else/Laziness
  • We are not as clean as we think
  • The anesthesia work area is a fertile environment
    for all kinds of pathogens
  • In one recent study, researchers noted that the
    anesthesia work area became contaminated within 4
    minutes from the start of the intraoperative
    care of the patient
  • Suction catheters, vaporizer dials, blood
    pressure cuffs, your ink pen, computer keyboards,
    reservoir bag, monitor cables, pressure control
    valves
  • Routine care versus Emergencies( code boxes,
    difficult airway carts)

31
Laziness, Not Me, Someone Else
  • Cost saving short cuts-
  • EKG leads, close proximity to blood and arm pits
  • Blood pressure cuffs- close proximity to arm
    pits, known to be a reservoirs for MRSA
  • Wiping ports- One study found that the lumens of
    stopcock became contaminated with pathogenic
    bacteria in 32 of the cases

32
Not me!
  • In anesthesia Analgesia 1995 80(4) 764-769
  • Providers who were providing care to patients
    believed to be harboring HIV and HBV washed their
    hands 95
  • of the time versus about 58 when caring for the
    same patients when their HIV and HBV status was
    unknown.
  • Another study J Hospital Infection 200870(2)
    researchers found a disturbingly high rate of
    computer keyboard use with contaminated hands
  • Furthermore- 17 of anesthesia providers
    performed any sort or hand hygiene before caring
    for a patient although hand hygiene rose to 69
    before eating

33
Not Me!We are not as clean as we think
  • Anesthetic care requires performing interventions
    that involve close patient contact, under
    performance pressure, requiring skillful
    techniques with very little margin of error
  • The potential for contamination of the anesthesia
    work area is great.
  • Difficult airway carts and code boxes

34
Production Pressure
  • Operating rooms are a huge source of revenue for
    the hospital
  • Intense pressure on providers of care to make
    sure rooms are turned over quickly between
    patients
  • 10 minute turnovers-good for the bottom line, but
    are they good for the patient?
  • Intense production pressure on those who may not
    understand the importance of a proper cleaning
    for the anesthesia workspace and the OR-
    anesthesia aides

35
Production Pressure
  • Patients with bacterial infections such as MRSA
    or VRE carry the organisms all over their bodies,
    clothing, lines and any inanimate object they may
    come into contact with such as IV pumps, door
    handles, bed side rails, BP cuffs, stethoscopes
  • Transfer of the microorganisms readily occurs by
    many different vectors, with the hands being the
    most prominent

36
Resources/Supportive Measures in the
Hospitals/ASCs/Office
  • Visit the anesthesia department
  • Inspections, do they work?
  • Will another method of involvement by the
    Infection control department have better results
  • Internal IC taskforce, IC zar
  • In-services
  • Include anesthesia in IC decisions that involve
    anesthesia

37
Supportive Help/Resources
  • Multi-dose vials- AANA working with CDC to
    eliminate
  • Disposable leads?
  • Infusion pumps/re use of syringes
  • MRSA and entering the drawers of the work station
  • Reward practitioners who display an interest in
    IC principles
  • IC friendly workstations
  • Educate staff/all staff
  • Additional time for turnover of rooms following
    an ICU or MRSA/VRE case?

38
Surveillance
  • Common bag for neosynephrine ?
  • Prepping the tops of vials before entering
  • Where do you put the dirty laryngoscope blades?
    How often is that spaced cleaned?
  • How about the laryngoscope handles?
  • Culturing the code boxes/ difficult airway
    carts/terminal cleaning
  • Using a new catheter every time you suction a
    patient
  • What do you do with the dirty one?

39
Surveillance
  • IC practitioners considered a threat versus
    friendly
  • Gowns, gloves and masks before CVL/arterial line
    insertion?
  • Gowns gloves and masks before regional
    anesthesia?
  • What to do with medications drawn up for one
    patient and not used? Safety versus cost
    containment
  • Video taping induction and emergence for learning
    purposes

40
USP 797
  • USP 797 is a far-reaching regulation that governs
    a wide range of pharmacy policies and procedures.
    It is designed both to cut down on infections
    transmitted to patients through pharmaceutical
    products and to better protect staff working in
    pharmacies in the course of their exposure to
    pharmaceuticals.
  • Issued by U.S. Pharmacopoeia (USP), the
    regulation governs any pharmacy that prepares
    "compounded sterile preparations" (CSPs).

41
USP 797
  • Persons who perform sterile compounding include-
    pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, anesthesia
    professionals, nurses and other physicians.
  • The U.S. Pharmacopeia is the independent
    organization chartered by Congress in 1863 to act
    as the official standards setting authority for
    all prescriptions, OTC, dietary supplements and
    healthcare products manufactured and sold in the
    United States.

42
USP 797
  • CSPs are defined as low, medium and high risk
    depending on their probability of microbial
    contamination.
  • With one exception and that being the immediate
    use provision, all CSPs must be compounded in a
    class 5 or better air quality environment.
    Operating rooms rarely, if ever meet this
    standard!
  • Low risk CSP include any single drug drawn into a
    syringe for direct injection. Examples,
    ephedrine, fentanyl, vecuronium.

43
USP 797
  • Immediate use provisions-detailed criteria
  • If administration is not begun within 1 hour
    following the start of the preparation of the
    CSP, the CSP shall be promptly, properly and
    safely discarded.
  • OH BOY! What does this mean for anesthesia?

44
Oh Boy, What does this mean for anesthesia?
  • Guidelines, not law
  • Joint Commission does not directly mandate

45
APIC Urges Injection, Infusion Safety
  • The Association for Professionals in Infection
    Control and Epidemiology has published
    recommendations emphasizing the safe use of
    syringes, IV infusions and medication
    vials.Besides strongly discouraging the use of
    syringes, IV supplies and medication vials for
    more than a single patient, the 48-point
    position paper urges healthcare workers to
    Wash or sanitize their hands before touching
    medication vials, IV supplies and injection
    supplies Disinfect IV ports using the friction
    method and 70 alcohol, an iodophor or another
    antiseptic agentRefrain from transferring
    medication from 1 syringe to another, even if
    it's for the same patient Refrain from
    carrying vials in the pockets of clothing and
    Refrain from leaving needles, cannulas or spikes
    in the rubber stoppers of medication vials.

46
CMS Infection Control Guidelines ASC
  • The Guidelines - "Infection Control Surveyor
    Worksheet"II. Injection Practices (injectable
    medications, saline, other infusates) Additional
    Instructions Observations are to be made of
    staff who prepare and administer medications and
    perform injections (e.g., anesthesiologists,
    certified registered nurse anesthetists,
    nurses). Practices to be Assessedgt A. Needles
    are used for only one patientgt B. Syringes are
    used for only one patientgt C. Medication vials
    are always entered with a new needlegt D.
    Medication vials are always entered with a new
    syringegt E.. Medications that are pre-drawn
    labeled with the time of draw, initials of the
    person drawing, medication name, strength, and
    expiration date or timegt

47
CMS Guidelines Continued
  • F. a. Single dose (single-use) medication vials
    are used for only one patient (A "No" response
    must be cited in relation to 42 CFR 416.48(a).)
    b. Manufactured prefilled syringes are used for
    only one patientc. Bags of IV solution are used
    for only one patientd. Medication administration
    tubing and connectors are used for only one
    patientG. List all injectable medications/
    infusates that are in a vial/ container used for
    more than one patient Name of Medication
    Average number of patients per vial/containe I.
    The rubber septum on a multi- dose vial used for
    more than one patient is disinfected with
    alcohol prior to each entry

48
CMS Guidelines Continued
  • J. Multi-dose medications used for more than
    one patient are dated when they are first
    opened and discarded within 28 days of opening or
    according to manufacturer' s recommendations,
    whichever comes firstK. Multi-dose medications,
    used for more than one patient, are not stored
    or accessed in the immediate areas where direct
    patient contact occursL. All sharps are
    disposed of in a puncture-resistant sharps
    container M. Sharps containers are replaced
    when the fill line is reached N. Additional
    breaches in injection practices, not captured by
    the questions above were identified (If YES,
    please specify further in comments)

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One Syringe, One Needle, One UseOnly One Patient
  • A NATIONAL CAMPAIGN

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